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The Hawaiian Revival of the 1830s
In the 1830s, Hawaii experienced a remarkable revival. Initially, there were only 500 believers, but by 1838, a powerful movement of the Holy Spirit swept through the islands. In Hilo, one church welcomed 7,501 new members after a six-month probation. This revival was so profound that King Kamehameha III declared Hawaii a Christian kingdom. Despite later challenges, such as the influx of Buddhist immigrants, the revival's impact endured, with Hawaiian missionary societies emerging by 1860.
The Great Awakening and Its Legacy
The Great Awakening, beginning in 1727, laid the foundation for American society. Figures like Whitefield, Wesley, and Edwards were instrumental in this movement. The revival led to significant social reforms, including the abolition of the slave trade and the establishment of Bible societies. Contrary to some beliefs, the tide of revival does not need to recede completely before returning. The 1830 revival, for instance, began in Charleston, Massachusetts, and spread nationwide, influencing both urban and frontier areas.
The 1830 Revival and Its Global Impact
The 1830 revival in the United States and Great Britain was a powerful movement that lasted over a decade. Charles Finney, a prominent evangelist, played a significant role in this revival. His work in Rochester, New York, had a lasting impact, though often exaggerated. The revival also influenced Great Britain, raising leaders like James Coffey, who inspired future figures such as William Booth of the Salvation Army. This period saw revivals in Wales, Scotland, and Ireland, with significant social and spiritual changes.
Challenges and Misunderstandings
Despite the positive impact of revivals, misunderstandings and exaggerations can distort their true significance. Some scholars dismiss revivals as unstructured phenomena, while others exaggerate their outcomes. For instance, claims about the number of converts in Finney's Rochester revival were often inflated. It's crucial to approach historical accounts with discernment and recognize the genuine work of the Holy Spirit beyond famous evangelists.
Lessons from History
The 1830 revival also sparked new movements, such as the Plymouth Brethren and the Disciples of Christ, seeking to restore apostolic practices. However, not all movements were positive; some became exclusive or reactionary. The revival's global reach extended to places like Tonga, where indigenous leaders embraced Christianity and transformed their societies. These historical lessons remind us of the enduring power of revival and the importance of learning from the past to inspire future awakenings.
Closing Prayer
Let's take these lessons to heart because, as our friend said, those who won't learn from history have to go through the whole thing again.
Your introductions are so kind that I have to tell you, when I was in New Zealand, a man came up and said to me, "You know, Mr. Orr, it must be a great benefit to your ministry that people are so disappointed when they see you first." I wasn't sure what I should say, so I said, "Really?" Oh, he said, "I'm sorry, I didn't mean to put it that way. I mean that after people read your books or heard about you, and then they see you for the first time, they realize that only God could use you."
Now, I'm not here to talk about myself, but about the wonderful works of God. We heard a moment ago that people never learn from history, that they're condemned to live history again, but it's because they don't study history, that's why. This is particularly true of the 1970s and 80s, when we're in the middle of what you call the now generation. When they find that history is not relevant, they can't be bothered, and so they have to learn all over again. Some people find history a bore. I find people who find history a bore, a bore.
For example, in the 1830s, the total number of believers in Hawaii was 500. In 1835, the missionaries, largely Congregational, met for prayer. They sent an appeal to the United States, their home base, asking that they would pray for the pouring of the Holy Spirit in Hawaii. They promised they would pray for the rest of the world. In 1838 came the revival. One church in Hilo, on the Big Island of Hawaii, took in 7,501 after six months probation. They took in over 1,501 Sunday. There was such a movement all over Hawaii that little children would get up early in the morning to run out to the sugarcane fields to pray. It was a vast movement of prayer.
Now, this was among the Polynesian Hawaiians before the entry of the Chinese, Japanese, Filipinos, and other races. But so sweeping was that revival that King Kamehameha III declared the country a Christian kingdom and gave them a bill of rights. Twenty years later, they found that more than 19,000 of the converts were still standing in the churches. How many people know that? Of course, some may say, well, why is Hawaii not completely Christian today? Because the immigrants who came in to take the place of the Hawaiians who died off because of Western diseases, measles, and smallpox and the like, they were Buddhist largely. But even so, by 1860, the Hawaiians had their own missionary societies to evangelize the rest of the Pacific, and their churches are still thriving.
Now, the big question has come up: does the tide have to go out completely before it comes in again? I find that you cannot say so. I told you about the Great Awakening, 1727 onwards, that laid the foundation of this country, the awakening in the days of Whitefield and Wesley and Jonathan Edwards and others of like rank. Anyone who studies American history knows that the Great Awakening, as it's called, laid the foundation of this country. There's no question about that.
But last time I spoke, I spoke of the revival of 1792. I had told how the tide had gone out completely. The churches had their backs to the wall. And then they started what was called the Concert of Prayer. They set aside one day every month to pray for a spiritual awakening. And when that revival came, it swept multitudes into the kingdom of God and did untold good socially, such as the abolition of the slave trade, the beginning of monitorial schools for the poor, the foundation of the Bible societies, and all the denominational missionary societies.
But does the tide have to go out first before it comes in? No. In 1830, I found, to my amazement, it seemed almost too good to be true that another general awakening of phenomenal power swept the United States 1830, 1831, and continued for a dozen years. Now, you will find, if you go to theological seminaries, that those who hate the gospel, who run down evangelism and revival, speak of revivalism as if it were a frontier phenomenon. In other words, something of extravagance happens among the uneducated people on the frontier. But the revivals did not begin on the frontiers.
This great revival of 1830 began in late spring in Charlestown, Massachusetts, across the Charles River from Boston, and it spread throughout the country. At that time, a young evangelist called Charles Finney was holding forth in Rochester, New York. And they had a local revival of great power, so much so that it affected even the number of arrests of criminals for the next twenty years. It cut down so much. But lots of people have exaggerated that movement. I was speaking at a prayer congress at San Jose, when one of the speakers with great enthusiasm said, "Think of Finney's revival at Rochester, in which a quarter of a million people found Christ." I said to him after the service, "That poses a problem for me, because the population of Rochester was only 10,000. How could you have a quarter of a million converts?" Oh, he said, "I'm glad you told me. I must have got my figures mixed up a little bit." So he went back to his notes, and when he saw me again, he said, "I was quite wrong. It wasn't a quarter of a million, it was only 100,000." I said, "That still poses a problem for me. How could you have 100,000 converts in a town of 10,000 in those days when the fastest you could travel was the speed of a horse galloping? They couldn't fly in for a big expo or something of that type."
But Finney's reputation as a national evangelist was made in December of 1830 in the great revival at Rochester. But the movement was already underway throughout the rest of the country. Bishop Asbury, the leader of the Methodists, told his preachers, "We must attend to camp meetings. They make our harvest time." Very interesting that the Methodist Episcopal Church thrived in the 1830s and 1840s.
Now, perhaps some of you remember there was a program recently called Key 73. In 1972, a very godly Methodist scholar wrote an article for the Methodist and other denominational papers saying, "We as denominations must get behind this, otherwise the Lord will bypass us and he will raise up the Jesus people or someone like that." Well, he had a point. But I wrote to my, he said in his article, "We must not forget that the last great awakening in the United States ended in 1820." I was amazed. I wrote to him and said, "What about the revival of 1830, which lasted 12 years, and in the last two years your own denomination increased from 580,098 members to 1,171,356. They doubled in two years." He didn't answer me. So I went down to the public library in Los Angeles and I got his private address and wrote to him at home, repeating the same letter. I didn't get an answer, so I said to one of my Methodist colleagues at Fuller Seminary, "How do you make a scholar answer a serious letter?" He said, "Publish, man, publish." But I was reluctant to do that. I wouldn't like somebody to publish any time I goof. I like to be given a chance to correct. So I prepared it as if it were going to be published, and I wrote on the top of it, "Not yet published," and then he answered with a two-page letter. Do you know what his defense was? "What does it matter whether it was the first, second, third, fourth, or whatever revival?"
Now, if President Reagan said, "Our country is unprepared, the tragedy of American military strength is that the last war we ever fought ended in 1814," what would you think of him? You'd say, "What about the Mexican War? What about the Civil War? What about the Spanish-American War? What about World War I? What about World War II? What about the Korean War? What about the Vietnam War?" Apparently, so many of these scholars don't know that God worked in such ways in 1830, 1858, 1905. They think the last Great Awakening ended 1820, that's what they've been taught. Actually, what they teach our students is that these were movements unstructured, we would say of the Holy Spirit, they say unstructured, unorganized movements. And then Finney came along and organized them, and then Moody urbanized them, and then Billy Sunday made them big business, and now we've got Billy Graham. That's the way they teach. In other words, the Holy Spirit stopped working except through famous evangelists, and that is not true.
Now, this great revival spread throughout the United States, lasted until about 1842. Then after that came serious division. You know that the Baptists north and south split, the Methodists north and south split, the Presbyterians north and south split. The Episcopalians were smaller and they held on to their unity, and the same was true of some of the Lutherans who were still a minority. But the major denominations split, chiefly over the issue of slavery, and spirituality went down again for a while.
Now, this revival of 1830 was also effective in Great Britain. It raised up a man called James Caughey. That's spelled C-A-U-G-H-E-Y. In Ireland, we'd call that Cochie, with a guttural, but most Americans can't say Cochie, so they say Coffey. He was born in Ireland, emigrated to the United States, was converted in the revival, and went back and won thousands of people all over Great Britain, also in Ireland, in Dublin, and elsewhere. By the way, one of his converts was a young fellow called William Booth, who founded the Salvation Army. Now, there were great revivals also in South Wales first, and then North Wales in the 1830s, and then a movement stirred Wales again in the 1840s.
In Scotland, there were great revivals. There was a very godly man called William Burns, who was pastor of a church at Kilsyth in Scotland. That's where Whitfield had tens of thousands attending his meetings in a great movement of revival in an earlier day. W. H. Burns was very much concerned over the spiritual condition of his parish. There was so much drunkenness, so much violence, so much downright unhappiness and sin. His son, William Chalmers Burns, who was going out to be a missionary, came to Kilsyth and preached in his father's parish church. So great was the power of God in that meeting that the prayers and crying of the congregation drowned out the voice of the preacher. This was the beginning of the great revival of 1839 that spread throughout Scotland.
At the same time in Ireland, a country in which there's nearly always some trouble, there was such an outpouring of God's Holy Spirit that the bishops of the Church of Ireland — that's Anglican Episcopalian — talked about a second reformation. Alas, most of their converts were lost because when the great potato famine followed about ten years later, many of the converts, if not most of them, emigrated to the United States, Canada, Australia, and other places.
One other interesting thing is that out of these movements came several renewal movements. Restoration movements. First of all, in Ireland, there started what was called a breaking of bread that became finally known as the Christian Brethren. We call them the Plymouth Brethren. That movement developed at that time of revival to try and restore apostolic practice. In the United States, a similar movement began under Alexander Campbell and others. We call them the Disciples of Christ. They wanted to get back to apostolic practice.
There was another movement, a charismatic movement, that started in 1830 after the preaching of a great Scottish Presbyterian called Edward Irving. He decided to try and restore apostolic practice. But I found that that work was wrecked from within. It was charismatic. There were healings, tongues, trances, visions. But some very determined men used the gift of prophecy, or maybe I should say abused the gift of prophecy, in trying to get their own way.
You say, now what do you mean by that? Well, I was talking to a good friend of mine who went to a certain big charismatic gathering in the United States a few years ago. Someone there decided he needed straightening out, but decided to do it by a word of prophecy, as if the Lord were speaking. He stood up and said, "Behold, my servant Patrick has done wonderful things in my name, and he shall have his reward. But he has yet many things to learn if he will but listen." And so on. I said to my friend, "Were you impressed?" He said, "Not a bit." He said, "If that were the Holy Spirit speaking to me, he would know that my name is not Patrick. My nickname is Pat." So there was somebody faking. They were faking to try and bully him, you see. Sometimes within a charismatic movement, you find faking of that type. The leaders of this movement actually used the gift of prophecy to get rid of Edward Irving himself. Their great leader got rid of him.
To show you what I mean by false prophecy, they prophesied that they would be appointed twelve apostles and that Christ would come before the last one died. And so they did that. The last one died in 1899, and the church died shortly afterward. So we've got to be very careful because whenever there's a movement, there are always opportunists trying to have their own way. By the way, the Catholic Apostolic Church, as it was called, was not only charismatic but liturgical. They were more liturgical than Anglican or Roman Catholic or Greek Orthodox. You know that in the Roman Catholic Church, the priest wears vestments. So do those who help him at the altar, but not the common people. Even in the Catholic Apostolic Church, everyone wore vestments. They were all dressed like priests. But that movement died away.
Now, there was a man called George Scott, who went from Scotland to Sweden in the 1830s. He was chaplain to the British workmen who built the first railways in Sweden. The British were the first with railroads. He was not allowed to preach; it was against the law to preach anywhere outside a Church of Sweden congregation, a Lutheran congregation. But he got around that. One of the noblemen had a chapel, and so Scott began preaching there. He learned Swedish very quickly, and there started a great movement that swept the whole of Sweden. They drove Scott out of Sweden, but he was succeeded by a great man of God called Carl Olof Rosinius.
Now, there were also reactionary movements. In Germany, a great leader arose and said, "God has spoken to us in these last days by his servant Martin Luther. What need have we of the other denominations?" So they became very exclusive. We have that movement among Lutherans to this day in this country. In Holland, there's another man who stood up and said, "God has spoken to us in these last days by his servant John Calvin. What need have we of these other denominations? They're outside the true faith." And so there started an exclusive Reformed denomination.
Then also in England, there were some that arose in the Church of England who said, "We are the true church." They went back beyond the Reformers to the early councils, and thus was strengthened the Tractarian movement, which was high church or Anglo-Catholic. Even in the United States, among the Baptists of all people, there was one of these hyper-confessional movements. One man preached this famous landmark sermon which said, "We are the true church. Other people may get to heaven, but they're not in the true church." In other words, they taught that the first Baptist church was built on the banks of the Jordan and that anyone outside that was not in proper lineage. These were reactions against Revival.
But what was most encouraging about the Revival of 1830 onward was in 1834 there began a phenomenal work in the kingdom of Tonga in the South Seas. Now, our friends are going down to New Zealand. The people there, the original people, are Maoris, they're Polynesians, a bit like the original Hawaiians. Tonga is of the same race. A chief in Tonga called Tapa'aho, he's better known as George — it's much easier to say George than Tapa'aho — was wonderfully converted. He decided that he had to do something about it. His people were all pagans. They worshipped the demons. So what he did was he got a banana palm stalk, which is rather soft wood, wouldn't kill anyone, could hurt them. While the priestess was under demonic power, he took this and knocked her out. The people were frightened. They thought the heavens would open and fire would fall on this man and that would be the end of him. But nothing happened. The reign of the gods had ended.
They saw the Berfoni. His cousin, Finao, on another island in Tonga, took a different tack. He asked the people to bring all the gods before him, all these totems and wooden gods and the like, and he spoke to them in Tongan. He said, "I've brought you here," he said to the gods, "to put you to the test. And so that you'll have every chance, I'm going to tell you what I'm going to do. I'm going to burn you. So if you're really gods, run for it." And they all sat there, of course. So Finao ordered them to be burned. It took several days because the weather was damp. But the people were so frightened, they didn't go to work for days. They were so frightened. But nothing happened. Someone tried to poison the chief, but the missionaries helped him with emetics. The reign of the gods had ended.
Now that was early, but in 1834, a visitation came from above. You see, these people had been converted from idols to serve the true God, but they didn't know the gospel properly. So after 15 years of preaching and teaching, the baptism from above came. It made the Tongans into the missionaries of the South Pacific. I could tell you the same sort of things about Fiji. Fiji was the haunt of cannibalism. It's rather horrifying to read the records. For instance, King Tanoa was such a cannibal that when one of his own cousins offended him and fell at his feet asking forgiveness, the hard-hearted king refused. Before the eyes of his courtiers, he chopped off the man's arm and began to eat it in front of him. When he gave the signal, they fell on him and tore him apart. That was Fiji before the gospel. But it was the Tongans who brought the gospel to Fiji.
There are also wonderful revivals in Grainstown, in English-speaking South Africa. You've all heard of David Livingstone. His father-in-law was Robert Moffatt, and he saw a great in-gathering in Botswana Land, further west. At the same time, pioneers were entering into the Gold Coast. That's now called Ghana and Nigeria, and freed slaves went back to Sierra Leone and Liberia. Not only that, but another interesting thing happened. The churches sent out missionaries to the ancient churches of the East, to Egypt and Iran, Persia and Iraq and Turkey, and worked among the native Christians there and saw great revivals.
Now, one man that arose from this great movement in the United States was Charles Finney. I've already mentioned Finney to you before. As a gospel tactician, he's second to none. His advice is good to this day.
For instance, I remember, I've never been able to forget, he says, when the children of God exaggerate the work of grace in their midst, the Spirit of God is commonly grieved. That's good advice. Finney's full of instruction like that. But I think he was quite mistaken when he said, revival is nothing more than the right use of the appropriate means.
Now you might say, what permanent results were there out of this time of revival in the United States? In 1846 was founded the Evangelical Alliance. They believed in divine inspiration, authority, and sufficiency of Holy Scripture, the unity of the Godhead, the trinity of persons, in the utter depravity of human nature, the incarnation of the Son of God, justification of the sinner by faith alone, the work of the Holy Spirit in conversion and sanctification, the resurrection of the body, the judgment of the world by Jesus Christ, the internal blessedness of the righteous, and the eternal punishment of the wicked. That was the foundation, the sheetrock, as it were, of the evangelical movement. And so you'll find to this day those who are considered evangelicals adhere to this. It goes right back to 1846.
Now this awakening came to an end about 1842 in this country, maybe 1848 on the other side of the Atlantic. And then there came a time of great depression. But when I next speak to you, I'm going to tell you of the greatest and most wholesome awakening of all time that swept this country from coast to coast, filled every church with praying people, and filled every downtown hall or theater with people to pray at noon. That was the great revival of 1858. Let's take these lessons to heart because, as our friend said, those who won't learn from history have to go through the whole thing again.